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HP Pavilion dv7 review

in Laptops

Verdict

Not perfect, but it does have great speakers, a good display and plenty of power under the hood

Review Date: 8 Oct 2010

Reviewed By: Sasha Muller

Price when reviewed: £820 (£964 inc VAT)

Overall Rating
5 stars out of 6

Features & Design
4 stars out of 6

Value for Money
5 stars out of 6

Performance
5 stars out of 6


You certainly couldn’t describe the Pavilion dv7 as slow, either. As with several of the desktop replacements we’ve seen recently, HP has employed one of Intel’s older quad-core Core i7 processors: the 1.6GHz Core i7-720QM. While not up with the latest Core i5 and Core i7 models, it’s a choice that gives the HP a respectable 1.49 in our application-based benchmarks and means it’s fast enough even for a touch of HD video editing.

The quad-core processor is accompanied by an ATI Radeon HD5650 graphics card, so there’s enough power to cope with modern games as well. Faced with our Crysis benchmark at 1,600 x 900 and Medium quality, the HP managed a very respectable average of 34fps.

It’s once you turn your attention to less exciting pastimes that the HP flounders a little. This is no fault of the keyboard, though. Its scrabble-tile keys each have a nice crisp feel, and apart from the cramped cursor keys, the layout is pretty much spot on.

HP Pavilion dv7

Unfortunately, the Pavilion dv7 has inherited its touchpad from the Envy range, and it’s not entirely trouble-free. The big problem is that the buttons are integrated into the surface of the touchpad. Drag the cursor with a finger, and when you apply your thumb to either of the stiff buttons you’ll often find the cursor hopping left or right in response. Sometimes, inexplicably, it behaves itself, but at its worst it’s maddening.

A further annoyance comes from the cooling fans. With that powerful specification just begging you to tax it with gaming and heavy multitasking, it won’t be long before the HP’s noisy fans whirr into action. The speakers go loud enough to drown them out, but in quiet moments you’ll be in no doubt that the HP is working hard to stay cool. Battery life isn’t that impressive, with a result of just 3hrs 23mins in our light-usage test, but that isn’t altogether surprising given the power on tap and the size of the screen.

So it isn’t perfect, and there’s some hot competition around too: Samsung’s R780 is faster, and the Sony VAIO F-Series is more customisable. When it comes to all-round entertainment, however, the HP Pavilion dv7 has it all: great speakers, a good display and enough power to make the most of them. The trackpad is an annoyance and also enough to deny the dv7 a recommendation, but we’d be willing to cut HP’s Pavilion dv7 a little slack.

Author: Sasha Muller

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User comments

worth it!

Yeah, i am writing this on my hp pavilion dv7 right now. If you are unsure take my word for it, the screen is amazing and it has a really long battery life (which is perfect when you are delayed for 24 hours in the airport) and some of the small features it offers are great. These include (my favourite) the fingerprint scanner in the bottom right hand of the base. This can then remember sign in names and passwords so for signing in to say, facebook or ebay, a simple finger scan will sign you in :) brilliant.

By chrisbird93 on 28 Dec 2010

Recommended

I brought one 2 months ago for work, thinking of getting one for home also. Great laptop, only downside is the touchpad for the mosue - it's the worst I've used!

By JamesD on 6 Mar 2011

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